notoriously造句(31) English people are notoriously repressed and don't talk about their feelings.
(32) A notoriously absent - minded professor was one day observed walking along the street with one foot continually in the gutter, the other on the pavement.
(33) Toddlers are notoriously antisocial when it comes to sharing toys.
(34) When performing his stunts he was notoriously careless of his own safety.
(35) Doctors notoriously neglect their own health and fail to seek help when they should.
(36) He worked in the notoriously unhealthy environment of a coal mine.
(37) Large meetings are notoriously less productive and more difficult to handle.
(38) However, averages are notoriously unreliable.
(39) Notoriously, he wrote in very short sentences.
(40) They are notoriously slow workers.
(41) Manhattan's community planners are notoriously resistant to change.
(42) His books are notoriously impenetrable.
(43) The trains are notoriously unreliable.
(44) They paid royalties, though offering notoriously low advances.
(45) And it's always meant a notoriously steep learning curve.
(46) Our printing forefathers were notoriously careless about their pagination.
(47) Our power stations are notoriously inefficient.
(48) But good intentions make notoriously treacherous paving stones.
(49) My grandmother was a notoriously fussy housekeeper.
(50) A busy man, Johnny Cash, with a notoriously short attention span.
(51) He was notoriously avid for every shilling he could earn.
(52) In April the notoriously unreliable official figure for the state's unemployment rate dropped for the second month running - to 8.6%.
(53) Notoriously these words have crept into ordinary usage from medieval philosophical Latin.
(54) For this reason lupins, poppies, carrots and parsnips are notoriously difficult to transplant successfully.
(55) Bank customers are notoriously slow to shift their business, even if they are miffed.
(56) Video poker machines in almost every bar are notoriously rigged-yet punters can't get enough.
(57) Criminal fraud is notoriously difficult to establish and the evidence required to do so needs careful and skilled assessment.
(58) Odometer readings are of course notoriously unreliable as a guide to the distance travelled by the car.
(59) Yet charities' resources are often severely limited and funding in this sector is notoriously precarious.
(60) Commanders, R.N., are a notoriously hard-drinking breed, which scotched that suspicion.